• A prehistoric forest grows in Brunei

    From ScienceDaily@1:317/3 to All on Thu Apr 28 22:30:46 2022
    A prehistoric forest grows in Brunei
    First leaf fossil study of Borneo's rainforest reveals current ecosystem
    is ancient

    Date:
    April 28, 2022
    Source:
    Penn State
    Summary:
    A new study of leaf fossils conducted in the nation of Brunei on the
    island of Borneo has revealed that the current dominant tree group,
    the dipterocarps, has dominated the rainforests for at least four
    million years. The findings suggest that the current landscape
    is similar to what was present during the Pliocene Epoch, 5.3 to
    2.6 million years ago, and may provide additional justification
    for conservation of these forests that support many critically
    endangered species.



    FULL STORY ==========================================================================
    The first study of leaf fossils conducted in the nation of Brunei on
    the island of Borneo has revealed that the current dominant tree group,
    the dipterocarps, has dominated the rainforests for at least four million years, according to an international research team led by Penn State in partnership with Universiti Brunei Darussalam. The findings, published
    in the journal PeerJ, suggest that the current landscape is similar to
    what was present during the Pliocene Epoch, 5.3 to 2.6 million years
    ago, and may provide additional justification for conservation of these
    forests that support many critically endangered species.


    ========================================================================== "This is the first demonstration that the characteristic dominant life
    form of Borneo and the entire Asian wet tropics, the dipterocarp trees,
    was not only present but actually dominant. We found many more fossils
    of dipterocarps than any other plant group," said Peter Wilf, professor
    of geosciences in the Penn State College Earth and Mineral Sciences and a co-funded faculty member in the Institutes of Energy and the Environment
    (IEE).

    The dipterocarps are the world's tallest tropical trees, and the largest
    of them can reach 100 meters (328 feet) in height, approximately the
    height of a 22-story building.

    Wilf said the dipterocarps include hundreds of keystone species that
    support tropical Asia's critically endangered biodiversity by structuring rainforests and providing enormous food resources through pollination
    and their nutritious seeds. Borneo has almost 270 dipterocarp species,
    more than half the world's total.

    "Fossil leaves in the wet tropics are very rare because of extensive
    forest cover and deeply weathered soils that obscure rock exposures,"
    Wilf said.

    Past studies of the island's plant life generally involved fossil
    pollen, which is very resistant to decay. However, because dipterocarp
    pollen often does not preserve well, that data does not provide complete information on ancient plant landscapes in the Asian tropics, according
    to Wilf. This study provided ample fossil evidence from both leaves
    and pollen, at two sites that the team discovered after intensive reconnaissance in Brunei, that supports the idea that the current
    landscape's diverse, well-structured vegetation is similar to what was
    present during the Pliocene Epoch, 5.3 to 2.6 million years ago.



    ========================================================================== "From the same rocks that the dipterocarp leaf fossils are coming from
    in great numbers, there's hardly any dipterocarp pollen," he said. "The
    pollen and spores represent many other plant groups, including huge
    numbers of ferns, but barely any dipterocarps. So that validates the
    idea that there's a bias against the dipterocarp pollen." Ferry Slik,
    a professor at the Universiti Brunei Darussalam who studies tropical
    forest ecology and is a co-author on the paper, said this is an extremely important study of the country's fossil flora.

    "There are very few fossil studies from the Asian tropics," Slik said. "I
    hope this study will stimulate more research efforts on fossils in
    the tropics as they will tell us a lot about the natural history of
    the region." Wilf and his team unearthed a wide variety of fossil
    leaves and fruits, including many plant groups that are native today
    but had not been found before as fossils in the Malay Archipelago. These included three different genera of dipterocarps, such as Dryobalanops,
    whose species are nearly all threatened; understory plants such as the
    jujube Ziziphus and melastomes; and a climbing aroid plant, Rhaphidophora,
    that is related to the popular house plant Monstera.

    Slik said the team reconstructed an ancient ecosystem almost exactly
    like what is found in Brunei today.



    ========================================================================== "With the pollen included, we're getting a fairly complete representation
    of mangrove and swamp environments, bordered by tropical lowland
    dipterocarp rainforests with very diverse fern understories and lots
    of climbing plants, including more ferns, jujubes and aroids. So we're
    getting to actually seeing what the environment was like millions of
    years ago," Wilf said. "It was very much like what you can find there now, although those habitats have been cut down across much of tropical Asia."
    Wilf said one of the motivations for doing this study was to encourage conservation of these areas.

    "The tropical rainforests are where biodiversity is. Brunei is about the
    size of Delaware, but it has more than seven times the plant diversity
    of all of Pennsylvania," he said. "This area has an ever-wet climate
    similar to the Amazon or the central African rainforests. It is home to spectacular animal life such as proboscis monkeys, crocodiles, rhinoceros hornbills, clouded leopards, sun bears, flying lizards, bearded pigs
    and slow lorises." Although Borneo is one of the great biodiversity
    hotspots on Earth and its rainforests are ancient, its biodiversity is shrinking due to logging, agricultural conversion, and climate change.

    The dipterocarp trees are highly sought after by the logging industry,
    and Borneo suffers from high deforestation rates, said Slik, who is
    working to improve Asia's tropical ecosystems.

    "Borneo, and much of the Asian rainforests, are ground zero of the
    biodiversity crisis," Wilf said. "However, Brunei is a jewel in the
    system because it is one of very few countries in the region that still preserves more than half of its old growth rainforests." According to
    Wilf, each paleontological discovery highlights the importance of history
    and provides foundational support for setting up conservation areas and educating the public.

    "If a living group has a known paleo history, it has added preservation
    and educational value, and it's less likely to be destroyed," he said.

    "Paleontology provides the primary evidence for how and why life on
    Earth is distributed the way it is and when different groups of plants
    and animals arrived." This project started as a 2015 IEE seed grant
    for Wilf's project titled "Paleobotanical and Genomic Biogeography
    of Living-Fossil Gondwanan Trees in SE Asian Rainforests: Informing Biodiversity and Watershed Conservation in the Face of Climate Change and Deforestation." Later funding came from the National Science Foundation
    and Universiti Brunei Darussalam.

    In addition to Wilf and Slik, authors include Penn State graduates Xiaoyu
    Zou, who completed his senior thesis on the Brunei fossil leaves in tandem
    with this paper, and former doctoral student Michael Donovan, who now
    works at the Cleveland Museum of Natural History. Other authors include La'szlo' Kocsis, University of Lausanne; Antonino Briguglio, Universita`
    degli Studi di Genova; David Shaw, Biostratigraphic Associates (UK) Ltd;
    and Joseph Lambiase, Lambiase Geoscience.


    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by Penn_State. Original written by
    Kevin Sliman. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Related Multimedia:
    * Fossils,_trees_and_maps_of_Borneo ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Peter Wilf, Xiaoyu Zou, Michael P. Donovan, La'szlo' Kocsis,
    Antonino
    Briguglio, David Shaw, JW Ferry Slik, Joseph J. Lambiase. First
    fossil- leaf floras from Brunei Darussalam show dipterocarp
    dominance in Borneo by the Pliocene. PeerJ, 2022; 10: e12949 DOI:
    10.7717/peerj.12949 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/04/220428104015.htm

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